VORT Manoeuvre Guide

Three-Point Turn in South Australia

A three-point turn is one of the five slow speed manoeuvres used in South Australian VORT preparation. It tests whether you can choose a safe location, observe correctly, control the vehicle at low speed and turn the car around without affecting other road users.

This guide explains the idea in plain English. It is not a replacement for a driving lesson or official South Australian road rules.

What Is a Three-Point Turn?

A three-point turn is a low-speed manoeuvre used to turn the vehicle around on a road that is narrower than the vehicle’s normal turning circle. It normally involves moving forward across the road, reversing back, and then moving forward again in the opposite direction.

Goal 1

Choose a safe place

You need to select a safe, legal and suitable place with enough visibility and space.

Goal 2

Observe properly

You must check mirrors, blind spots, both directions and behind the vehicle at the right times.

Goal 3

Keep full control

Use slow speed, smooth steering and accurate stopping before touching the kerb.

Simple version: a good three-point turn is not about rushing the steering. It is about choosing the right place, moving slowly, looking around properly and not surprising other road users.

Before You Start: Choose the Right Location

Location choice is a big part of this manoeuvre. If the place is too narrow, too busy or has poor visibility, the manoeuvre becomes harder and riskier.

Good

Suitable place

  • Quiet street with low traffic
  • Good visibility in both directions
  • No nearby intersections causing confusion
  • No driveways, parked cars or obstacles blocking the reversing area
  • Enough road width to complete the manoeuvre safely
Avoid

Poor place

  • Busy traffic or fast approaching vehicles
  • Near crests, bends or poor visibility
  • Close to intersections, driveways or parked vehicles
  • Very narrow road where repeated movements may be needed
  • Any place where the manoeuvre would create risk or obstruction
Training tip: if the road is too narrow or traffic conditions are not suitable, choose a better location before starting where possible. In a test, poor location choice can make the whole manoeuvre harder.

Step-by-Step Three-Point Turn

The exact vehicle control can vary slightly between cars, hills and road widths. The safety system stays the same: check, signal, observe, move slowly and stop before the kerb.

Prepare from the kerb

After stopping safely at the kerb, secure the vehicle if required. Before moving off, check the centre mirror and right mirror, then signal right for at least 5 seconds.

Final observation before moving

Check the centre mirror again, right mirror and right blind spot. Also watch for traffic from driveways, side roads and vehicles that may be turning.

Move forward slowly

If safe, move away from the kerb smoothly and turn the steering wheel to the right. Keep the vehicle slow and under control.

Stop before the opposite kerb

As the vehicle approaches the right-side kerb, steer left while the car is still moving slowly where practical, then stop before touching the kerb.

Select reverse and observe

Select reverse. Check right, left and behind by turning your head. Do not rely only on mirrors or the reverse camera.

Reverse slowly across the road

Reverse slowly under full control. Keep checking behind and both sides because traffic conditions can change while you are reversing.

Prepare to drive forward

As the vehicle approaches the left-side kerb, steer right while still moving slowly where practical, then stop before touching the kerb.

Drive away safely

Select Drive or first gear. Check both directions, then move off only when safe. Finish smoothly in the correct lane and continue normal driving.

Observation Pattern

Many students focus too much on steering and forget observation. During a three-point turn, your eyes must keep moving because the car blocks part of the road while you are turning or reversing.

Stage What to check Why it matters
Before moving from kerb Centre mirror, right mirror, right blind spot and traffic ahead. To make sure it is safe to move across the road.
Before reversing Right, left and behind by turning your head. To check for vehicles, cyclists, pedestrians and driveway traffic.
During reversing Behind, both sides and road users approaching from either direction. Traffic can appear while you are already in the manoeuvre.
Before driving forward again Left, right and ahead. To avoid moving into the path of approaching traffic.
Key reminder: reverse camera and parking sensors may help, but they do not replace proper head checks and observation.

Common Mistakes in a Three-Point Turn

Starting in the wrong place

A bad location can make the manoeuvre unsafe before the car even moves.

Not signalling correctly

Signal timing matters. Do not signal before the mirror check, and do not mislead other road users.

Weak blind spot checks

A small mirror glance is not enough when moving away from the kerb or reversing across the road.

Touching or mounting the kerb

Poor speed control or late steering can cause the car to touch or mount the kerb.

Reversing while not looking

Looking only forward or only at the screen during reverse is a common unsafe habit.

Obstructing traffic unnecessarily

If traffic is close, it may be safer to wait and let it pass before continuing.

What Can Cause a “Not Yet Competent” Result?

In a test or assessment situation, the three-point turn may be marked as not yet competent if the driver does not complete the required parts safely, legally and in control.

High-risk problems

  • Choosing an unsafe or unsuitable location
  • Moving without proper mirror and blind spot checks
  • Failing to give way to other road users
  • Touching or mounting the kerb
  • Rolling opposite to the intended direction
  • Not checking properly before or during reversing
  • Unnecessarily obstructing traffic for too long
  • Losing control of steering, speed or position

Instructor Tips

Tip

Move slower than you think

Slow speed gives you time to steer, observe and stop before the kerb.

Tip

Do not stare at the kerb

Use the kerb as a reference, but keep scanning around the vehicle.

Tip

Steer while moving where practical

Stationary steering is not usually encouraged. Try to turn the steering wheel while the car is moving slowly where safe and practical.

Tip

Pause if traffic changes

If another road user approaches, stop safely and reassess. Do not rush just because you have already started.

How This Connects to VORT Preparation

The three-point turn is not only a parking-style exercise. It shows whether the driver can combine observation, signalling, judgement and low-speed control under test pressure.

Observation

Mirror checks, blind spot checks and scanning while reversing.

Judgement

Choosing a safe location and deciding when to wait for traffic.

Vehicle control

Smooth speed, accurate steering and stopping before the kerb.

To prepare properly, practise with a driving instructor first. Do not practise three-point turns in busy traffic or unsafe locations.

Other VORT Manoeuvre Guides

The three-point turn is one of the five slow speed manoeuvres. You can also read the other manoeuvre guides when they are available.

Moving off from kerb

Read guide

Angle park

Read guide

Reverse parallel park

Read guide

U-turn

Read guide

All 5 manoeuvres

View all manoeuvres

VORT overview

Read VORT guide

Official Reference

The official MyLicence Driving Companion page for Unit 2 Task 11 explains the learning outcome and requirements for the 3-point turn. Use official sources for licensing and assessment information because requirements may change.

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